Well, I am here in Long Island attending graduate school. For this blog, I try to gather marine and environmental related news and post them here, and add my two cents where I deem appropriate. Enjoy!

Thursday, May 25, 2006

Florida turtle eggs may have been buried

NEW SMYRNA BEACH, FL, United States (UPI) -- Construction crews may have accidentally buried a protected sea-turtle nest at Florida`s New Smyrna Beach because biologists might not have marked it.

However, a Volusia County, Fla., environmental consultant on sea turtles, Bob Ernest, told the Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel a nest might not have been there in the first place.

'This was our fault,' Ernest told the newspaper. 'We didn`t have the proper procedures in place.'

The incident is said to be the first reported problem involving the federally protected sea turtles and a $14 million, 5-mile-long dune restoration project.

Although turtle nesting officially started May 1, dune restoration was allowed to continue and Ernest`s Ecological Associates Inc. of Jensen Beach was assigned to monitor the nesting and move nests at risk from the construction work.

WHAT??? NOT HAVE THE PROPER PROCEDURES IN PLACE??? Aren't you a consulting and monitoring firm? Shouldn't you know what the hell you are doing? The problem with these private consulting firms is that they are private, not regulated by the government and therefore usually find or go along with whoever is paying them. Turtle nest monitoring should be done by state officials, not some guy getting paid by the big companyies doing the beach construction.

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About Me

I am a marine biologist that is currently attending graduate school at the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Marine Sciences Research Center, of Stony Brook University, New York. I am very interested in marine ecology and have been focusing my studies on bay scallop interactions with their habitats. I plan to investigate various anthropogenic impacts on bay scallop populations for my PhD dissertation. This blog will highlight the details of my graduate research, from bay scallop-eelgrass interactions as previously mentioned, to alternative habitats for scallops, such as Codium, to trophic cascades, and more. Enjoy!